Astronauts to Rescued Chilean Miners: 'We Admire You'

The San José mine lies north of Copiapó, Chile, in the world’s driest desert, the Atacama. The Advanced Land Imager (ALI) on NASA’s Earth Observing-1 (EO-1) captured this natural-color image of the mine and its surroundings Sept. 16, 2010. The mine complex appears as an uneven patch of gray in the midst of camel-colored hills devoid of vegetation.Credit: NASA/EO-1 ALI

The 33 men
rescued from a mine in Chile after a record 69 days stuck deep underground have
received some cosmic praise from astronauts living on the International Space
Station.

"From
outer space, we just wanted to let you know how proud we are of you, and how
much we admire your courage and your tenacity," space station commander
Douglas Wheelock said Wednesday (Oct. 13) as the miners were lifted out of Chile's collapsed San Jose Mine.

Wheelock, a
NASA astronaut, is one of six astronauts living aboard the International Space
Station. The crew includes three Americans and three Russians, all of whom
expect to spend around six months living in space.

"We
want to congratulate all the miners for their perseverance, and their faith in
their friends and their co-workers that were struggling so many days and so
many nights to get them back to safety," Wheelock said.

The Chilean miners were trapped 2,200 feet (670 meters)
underground during an Aug. 5 collapse. They maintained contact with the surface
using a small support tunnel, which allowed rescuers to send down supplies and
food. [Graphic: Perils of Underground Mining]

"Godspeed
to everyone," Wheelock said. "It's truly an answer to prayer. You've
been in our thoughts these last several months and several weeks, and
congratulations."

NASA sent
two medical doctors, a psychologist and an engineer to aid the rescue effort.
The experts drew on NASA's experience with long-duration space station missions
such as that of Wheelock and his crew to suggest ways to keep the miners healthy and in good mental health.

NASA
engineer Clint Cragg of the agency's Langley Research Center in Virginia
offered advice on the design of the one-man rescue capsule used haul the miners
out of their subterranean prison.

"When I
saw the first miner being extracted I was both happy and very relieved,"
Cragg said.

There
are still medical concerns for
the Chilean miners
now that they are back on the surface. After months living underground, they
may suffer from sunburned eye, fungal infections and post-traumatic stress,
medical experts have said.